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Re: [Full-Disclosure] [SECURITY] [DSA-403-1] userland can access Linux kernel memory
- To: full-disclosure@lists.netsys.com
- Subject: Re: [Full-Disclosure] [SECURITY] [DSA-403-1] userland can access Linux kernel memory
- From: Florian Weimer <fw@deneb.enyo.de>
- Date: Mon, 1 Dec 2003 23:58:25 +0100
debian-security-announce@lists.debian.org wrote:
> Recently multiple servers of the Debian project were compromised using a
> Debian developers account and an unknown root exploit. Forensics
> revealed a burneye encrypted exploit. Robert van der Meulen managed to
> decrypt the binary which revealed a kernel exploit. Study of the exploit
> by the RedHat and SuSE kernel and security teams quickly revealed that
> the exploit used an integer overflow in the brk system call. Using
> this bug it is possible for a userland program to trick the kernel into
> giving access to the full kernel address space. This problem was found
> in September by Andrew Morton, but unfortunately that was too late for
> the 2.4.22 kernel release.
Does this mean that the vendor-sec concept has failed, or that there is
a leak on that list? Or is this just an issue which is very specific to
Linux and its maintainer situation?
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